outside on the sidewalk.
    New, shallow, white-wood boxes held a dozen plants
   each. The plants were in bright terra-cotta clay pots fresh
   from the kiln. There were geraniums, passionately bright
   and clear and perfectly formed; red, rose, pink, white and
   even fuchsia. Blue hyacinths, with white veins, looked like
   clubs. (For some reason, the people called them "lilies.")
   Then there were pots of blue-purple ageratum; a name no
   one could pronounce. Women asked the price of "them
   purplish flour-iss."
    There were baby pots of lusty and eternal-looking ivy,
   and, for people with money, large pots of steel-blue
   hydrangea or coral-bell azaleas.
    The plants were sprinkled hourly and little rivers of
   water ran down the sidewalk to the gutters. The awnings
   made shade, and the damp sidewalks and the flowers
   fresh-smelling from their sprinkling, and all the flower
   colors, and the way everyone looked so excited and the
   beautiful, sunny day all put together were like a gallant
   gauntlet slapped across the cheek of death.
    Each year, Mary bought a geranium to plant on her
   father's grave. She let Maggie-Now choose the colon The
   girl went into a state of ecstatic indecision. Mary waited
   patiently, knowing that in the end the child would choose
   the brightest red in the lot. ~ Of 1
   Mary, looking at the awnings and flowers and the smiling,
   eager vendors and the leisurely-moving people, said:
   "It's just like Paris."
   "Was you ever in Paris, 1lama-" aslred the girl.
   ``No."
   "I'll take this red one, Ilama."
    "That'll be thirty cents,' said the flower man, "and a
   nickel back when you bring the flower pot back."
    Maggie-Now walked proudly with the geranium in the
   crook of her arm. She smiled at other little girls who
   carried potted plants and they smiled back.
    There was a tombstone place on one corner. Its yard
   was crowded with stone angels and stone books opened in
   the middle, large stone crosses and smooth stone
   blocks all with smooth, blank spaces, waiting for a name.
    One time they saw a m.m sitting in the sun on a camp
   chair in back of the store's yard. He worked with hammer
   and chisel, putting the finishing touches to a monument.
   A child with stone curls rested with closed eyes, with her
   cheek on her folded arms. Thick stone angel wings s.
   emed to sprout from the child's neck. The sculptor, noting
   Mag`,rie-Now's interest, said:
   "It's for an only child.'
    There was another tomhsto1e place a few blocks further
   on. It had a sign:
   When you think ot me, don't think of tombstones. But
   when you thinly of tombstones, think of me.
    ,Nlary always stopped to read it as though it were
   something new and she always smiled at the message.
    A man, in business for himself, had a pushcart filled
   with watering cans. You could rent one for a dime, but he
   asked a quarter deposit on a can. Only the foolish threw
   money away like that. People brought their own tin cans
   from home for watering purposes Maggie-Now had
   brought her sand bucket for hauling water and the toy
   shovel and rake that went with it for gardening.
    They went past the Hcbrew cemetery. The gates were
   high, like, Maggie-Now thought, three men standing on
   top of each other. There was a big it on star on top of the
   iron arch of the gate.
                    ~ '' 9 1
                        
   "Why don't they have a cross like we do?" asked
   Maggie-Now. "Because it's a Jewish cemetery. That's their
   star of David and they pray to the star the way we pray to
   the cross. I told you that last year."
    They got to the cemetery and Mary nodded to the care-
   taker sitting at the little wirldov of the little stone house
   inside the gates.
   "A nice day," said Mary.
   "Sure is," agreed the caretaker.
    The cemetery looked like a lawn party that had gotten
   out of hand. It was crowded with women, children and
   even a few men. The young women wore light summer
   dresses and hats with ribbons and flowers. The older
   women wore whatever had been around the
   house usually a black dress or a suit skirt whose jacket
   had been given to the Salvation Army years ago, and a
   shirtwaist. They wore hats that looked as though they had
   been hanging in the cellar for five years. In short, the
   older women "made do" and used new-clothes money for
   more important things, like well, say food.
    There were three times as many children as adults. They
   ran, jumped, hollered, wrestled with each other and played
   tag among the tombstones. They tumbled about as though
   they'd been spilled out of a bag. They were deliriously
   happy to be out of the dark, crowded tenement rooms and
   off the narrow, crowded streets, and away from the
   streetcars and trucks which made their street games
   hazardous, and to have this great, big, green beautiful
   cemetery to play in for an hour or so.
    Mary saw a boy chinning himself on the outstretched
   arm of a granite angel. "I wouldn't do that if I were you,
   little boy," she said.
   "Okay, teacher," said the kid cheerfully and ran away.
    After all these years thought Mary ruefully, I still look aim
   act like a schoolteacher. Imagine!
    Everybody was sociable. One felt that even the dead
   were sociable. They had to be, the way the plots were so
   close together with only a footpath between the graves.
   And the way some graves held three departed people, one
   on top of the other, because few families could afford to
   buy a separate grave for each r /70 |
   of their dead. Also, land was getting very scarce in
   Greater Next York.
    Maggie-Now skipped ahead. She wanted to be the first
   to find the grave. "Here it is, Mama!" she shouted. "Here!"
   "Don't scream," said Mary. "It won't run away."
    Mary took the sand bucket, spade and shovel from her
   net shopping bag and stood them in a row. She added
   some rooted ivy cuttings that she had brought with her.
   Maggie-Now set the plant at the end of the row of things.
    "Look at that trash on the grave," said Mary. "Perpetual
   c are indeed! Why, they don't even cut the grass! " She
   lifted her veil over her hat and pulled off her gloves.
   "Well, let's get to work."
    Maggie-Now threw herself on her knees and furiously
   began raking the litter from the plot. A woman waved
   frantically from two graves away. When she couldn't catch
   Mary's attention, she called: "Yoo boo, Miz Moore. Yoo
   hog!"
    "Oh, Mrs. Schondle," Mary called back. "Hello! I missed
   you last year."
   "Yeah. I wasn't here," said Mrs. Schondlc, waddling over.
    Mrs. Schondle, a stout vie omen to start with, wore a
   black dress several sizes too large for her. The neckline
   gaped loosely, exposing her chest and the upper part of
 & 
					     					 			nbsp; her breasts, which were already burned a lobster red from
   sudden exposure to the sun for a few hours, after a year
   of living indoors.
    She wore a lumpy black hat draped with thick black
   mourning veils. The hat had slipped down over one ear
   and the veils were hanging wild. This gave her beet-red,
   smiling face a what-thehell-do-I-care look.
    "Yeah, I wasn't here last year," she explained. "Because
   my oldest daughter vitas down from Jamaica. You know.
   The one by my first husband? She didn't want to come to
   the cemetery with me, being's," she nodded toward her
   grave, "Mr. Schondle was the stepfather. You know. Not
   the real father? Anyways, I thought I'd stay home with her
   being's I don't see her much because," her voice dropped
   to a whisper, "I don't get along so good with him her
   husband. He's . . . " she looked around carefully to make
   sure no one ~ Ise v as listening. "he's a Prattisssent! F I
   ~ I I
   One of them kind, you know. What thinks every time a
   Catholic boy is born they bury a gun under the church for
   him?"
   "That's too bad," said Mary.
    "Oh, I got my troubles," said Mrs. Schond]e cheerfully.
   "But you look good, Miz Moore."
   "You look fine, too, Mrs. Schondle."
    "Oh, I'm the kind w hat never changes. I look the same
   like I looked when I was first married. Everybody tells me
   that," she said. "But your little girl, now! My, she got big!
   Two years ago, she was a baby."
   "They shoot up fast, ' said Mary.
     "Too fast. You slave for them and sacrifice and the first
   thing you know, they're young ladies and married."
     A diversion was caused by a mother yelling at her sons
   who were playing tag and running back and forth over the
   family plot a few graves away.
     "Now, Frankie," said the mother, "I told you before.
   Stop running over your grandmother. Do you want to have
   hard luck?" In answer, the boys ran over the grave again.
   "All right, then," said the mother reasonably enough. Then
   she hauled off and gave each kid a slap alongside the ear.
   "The next time you'll listen," she said.
     "Tech! Tsch!" commented Mrs. Schondle. "The way
   children is brought up nowadays. No respect for
   nothing nobody. Living or dead." She straightened her
   hat. It fell over the other ear. "Well, I better leave you
   plant your plant," she said. "Say! Your ive-ree's growing
   good. Soon your father will have a whole ive-ree blanket.
   I wish I had luck with ive-ree. But it won't grow for me."
   Hat bouncing, veils quivering, she made her way back to
   Mr. Schondle's grave.
     Maggie-Now had the grave raked of debris. She had a
   little mound of trash. "Where'll I put it, Mama?"
     "Over there on that big pile where other people are
   putting their trash."
     They pulled up the dry stalk of last year's geranium and
   planted the new one. Ilaggie-Now made a dozen trips
   with her bucket to one of the nearby spigots. They planted
   the new ivy shoots. They commented on how well the last
   year's planting ~ 1121
   had taken hold. The final thing was pinching off six sprigs
   of the established ivy. Mary would root them in water,
   plant them and nurture them through a summer, fall and
   winter and plant them on the grave come next Decoration
   Day.
    All the things were stowed away, including the flower
   pot, in the net shopping bag. Mary and Maggie-Now went
   to sit on a nearby stone bench. They sat in silence for a
   while. Mary thought of her father. She thought of the
   passage of time.
    It is ten years, she thought, since ='e laid him at rest. And
   the combs he bought me more than thirty years ago are still
   new. Things last longer than people.
   "It's time now," said Mary.
    Mother and daughter stolid by Michael Moriarity's grave.
   Mary clasped her hands, bowed her head and said a prayer
   for the dead. Maggie-Now joined her in the amen. Mary
   took a long, last look at the engraved name, Michael
   Moriarity, and they took their leave. They walked over to
   say good-by to Mrs. Schondle.
   "You going for pot cheese?" asked Mrs. Schondle.
   Mary hesitated. "Yes."
   "Then do you care if I go along?"
   "Why, we'd love to have you. Wouldn't we, Maggie-Now?"
    The girl scowled. She had looked forward to the trip all
   year  especially eating alone with her mother in the
   restaurant. Now that Mrs. Schondle had to spoil it.
   "Say yes," whispered her mother. "It's only a white lie."
   "Yes," said Maggie-Now sullenly.
   "And smile." Maggie-Now gave Mrs. Schondle a distorted
   grimace.
     "That's awfully nice of youse," said Mrs. Schondle. "It's
   just that I don't like to eat alone. I always got to eat alone
   when I'm home."
     It took them a long time to get out of the cemetery
   because Mrs. Schondle walked slowly and had to stop from
   time to time to get her breath and, besides, she liked to
   stop and look at things.
     They paused by the new graves; a dozen or so the dead
   of the week. The raw-soil mounds were still high. A couple
   of men were working efficiently and briskly, stripping dead
   foliage and withered flowers from the funeral pieces. They
   piled up the
                    [ ~ ~3 1
                        
   wire forms, pillows, stars, crosses and hearts. They sold
   these frames to the florists to make new floral pieces for
   new dead people. The men paid for the privilege of
   salvaging these wire frames.
    A group of little girls stood by patiently waiting for the
   ribbons from the pieces. They were of the neighborhood
   and they got their hair bows that v. ay. The men gave the
   big girls the black ribbons, the in-between girls the
   lavender, and the little girls ot the white ribbons.
    "Want a hair bow, girlie?" said one of the men,
   proffering a lavender ribbon to Maggie-Now.
    The girl shuddered and squeezed tip close to her
   mother. "No," she said.
   "No, what?" prodded her mother.
   "No, thank you."
    The restaurant was across the street from the cemetery.
   It was nearly a block long v. ith open doors every twenty
   feet or so. Inside it was dim and cool. White-aproned
   waiters wove in and out among the tables and a joyous
   babble of voices rose and fell. It was very festive even
   though most of the women wore black dresses.
    They had barely seated themselves at a little round table
   when a waiter materialised and gave the table top a ritual
   wipe with his napkin.
   "What s yours, ladies " he asked.
   "I'll have pot cheese and chives," said Mary. "And coffee.'
    "Make mine the same," said llrs. Schondle. "Only beer,
   instead-a coffee. And sour cream on the side."
   "And the young lady?" asked the waiter.
    Maggie-Now was about to open her mouth and order a
   piece of pound cake  
					     					 			with chocolate ice cream on top and
   a bottle of strawberry soda, when Mary said: "She'll have
   just a cream soda. '
   "But, Mama . . ." wailed Maggie-Now.
    "Never mind." Mary pressed the girl's thigh under the
   table. 'You can have the nickel deposit from the flower
   pot and buy anything you like."
   "All right," sighed Maggie-NoN`-.
   Mary did some quick figuring. She had fifty cents for her
                     1 1141
                        
   lunch and Maggie-Now's, a nickel tip for the waiter, ten
   cents carfare home and ten cents for emergencies. She
   had enough money to be sure, but four years ago, the time
   she had lunched with Mrs. Schondle, the poor woman had
   been fifteen cents short and Mary had had to pay it.
   Fearing another emergency like that, she held back on
   Maggie-Now.
    The waiter brought the food and, to nobody's surprise,
   an extra plate and fork for Maggie-Now. He was used to
   people ordering and saying the child didn't want anything
   and, after the food was served, being requested to bring an
   extra plate and fork. So he brought the extra plate and
   fork along with the order to save time. Mary divided her
   pot cheese and chives with Maggie-Now.
    "She can have some of mine," said Mrs. Schondle,
   reluctantly pushing her bowl toward YIaggie-Now.
   "Oh, no," said Maggie-Now.
   "She has enough, thank you," said Mary.
   "All right, then." Eagerly:, Mrs. Schondle pulled her bowl
   back.
    While the women talked, Maggie-Now gulped down her
   soda, dabbled with the pot cheese and let her eyes rove
   around the restaurant. She fastened her attention on a
   handsome boy at a nearby table. She stared at him and he
   stared back. Mrs. Schondle noticed this and said
   portentously to Mary:
   "It won't be long now."
   "Well, you can't hold back time," sighed Mary.
    "Just so's she don't throw herself away and marry
   somebody what's no good like mine did."
   "Oh, she's got a lot of sense," said Mary.
    Suddenly, Maggie-Now realized that they were talking
   about her and the possibility of her marrying. It made her
   feel important and mature. She threw back her head, half
   closed her eyes, and smiled languidly at the boy. His eyes
   popped for a second, then he put his thumb to his nose
   and wiggled his four fingers at her. Her face got red and
   she dropped her eyes to her plate.
    "I'm never going to get married," she said. "Because I
   hate boys."
   "What brought that on?' asked Mary.
   The waiter came and asked: one check or two? "Two
   checks,"
                    ~ ~ ~5 1
                        
   said Mrs. Schondle. She explained to Mary: "Some would
   hang back and wait for the other party to pay. But I don't
   sponge. I pay my way."
    Mary put a quarter and a nickel on her check.
   Twenty-five cents for her lunch and a nickel for the cream
   soda. A little to one side, she put his nickel tip.
    "Carfare!" he bawled over toward the bar. "Thank you,
   lady,' he said to Mary.
    Mrs. Schondle emptied her purse of all its coins. She
   took a nickel back for carfare. The waiter noticed she set
   nothing aside for a tip. He waited. She looted up at him
   with a bleak, pleading look.
   "That's all right, lady," he muttered.
     Mary took a nickel from her purse and edged it over
   toward Mrs. Schondle's check. The waiter scooped up the
   coins. "It's just that a man has to make a living," he said,
   as if in apology.
     "That's the truth," agreed Mrs. Schondle. "Only I left all
   my other money home."
     Mary and Maggie-No~v were going one way and Mrs.
   Schondle another. So they said their good-bye outside the
   restaurant. Marv took the woman's hand in hers and
   pressed it warmly.
   "Good-by, Mrs. Schondle."
    "You're so nice," said llrs. Scholldle. Fears came to her
   eyes. So nice to me."
   "We'll see you next year, God hilling," said Marv.